logo
A Better Use for $40 Billion

A Better Use for $40 Billion

Your Feb. 5 editorial 'Hurricane Musk and the USAID Panic' details the woke and inadvertently terror-supporting projects of the United States Agency for International Development.
Yet you might have noted the opportunity cost. The latest Arleigh Burke-class destroyers cost $2.5 billion each. You report that USAID managed $40 billion in 2023, enough to buy 16 more destroyers. Considering that the USS Arleigh Burke, the oldest ship in the class, is now 35 years old, if the USAID budget-to-destroyer price ratio has held constant, then 35 years of USAID has cost us 560 destroyers.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Send JD Vance to Africa
Send JD Vance to Africa

Wall Street Journal

time27 minutes ago

  • Wall Street Journal

Send JD Vance to Africa

Nigeria's population will be bigger than China's in 2100. Africa already has the youngest population in the world and will keep growing. It is rich in minerals, rare-earth minerals and ambition. Whoever builds serious economic relationships there now will shape the global balance of power tomorrow. So far, that hasn't been America. But there's real potential in the Trump White House, if the president puts the right man on the job. Under both parties, Washington has treated Africa like a charity case: useful for virtue signaling and grants, but not for serious geopolitics or trade. The result is a lost continent—with which the enemies of the U.S. are moving swiftly to engage. China is locking down mineral concessions, ports and telecoms. Russia moved into the Sahel with Wagner flags and Kalashnikovs. Turkey is opening mosques and construction sites. Even Iran is showing hustle. America is mostly absent. That may be changing in President Trump's second term. Africa has re-entered U.S. political conversation—not through humanitarian appeals, but through old-fashioned deal-making. There's talk of a deal to protect Congo's territorial integrity with American security assistance as the country combats rebels in the east in exchange for mineral rights. Senior White House advisers are making multicountry visits on the continent to explore opportunities for the U.S. private sector. The closing of the U.S. Agency for International Development also sent a signal: No more feel-good global welfare. It's time to talk business and self-reliance.

What has happened to America's humanity and compassion toward itself and others?
What has happened to America's humanity and compassion toward itself and others?

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

What has happened to America's humanity and compassion toward itself and others?

Every day I wake up to one headline or another that breaks my heart. It could be the entire population in Gaza starving and terrorized or one immigrant who is lawfully here torn from his family and illegally deported with no due process. It could be the thousands of deaths that have resulted from the halting of USAID funds to mitigate HIV infections or the lives torn asunder from massive federal employee firings and layoffs across multiple government agencies. Letters: House budget provision exempts executive branch from following court orders It could be students shut out from financial aid, ending their dreams of a college education or women who suffer physically and emotionally from the lack of available reproductive health care. Where do we draw the line on cruelty? Barbara Markoff, Milwaukee Letters: PSC's decision to OK gas plants feels like rubber stamp for WE Energies It saddens me every day that our government is disappearing in the face of the self-interest of a few. An entire generation of Americans, including my parents, fought in World War II alongside Great Britain and even the Soviet Union, and then when the war was over formed an alliance with European nations, NATO. Now these European allies are being discarded and shunned by the current administration. Veterans in this country also fought in the Korean War, and we have troops stationed in South Korea as a deterrent to North Korea, who is being supplied with nuclear weapons from Russia. The administration wants South Korea to pay more for the troops stationed there. It seems our history and the wars we fought in are being forgotten. Opinion: Trump gives off strongman pageantry with military parade we're paying for USAID, the organization for providing aid to third world countries, has been decimated and countless people are dying. Immigrants who have been living here for years are being persecuted and deported. What has happened to our country that was founded by "we the people, for the people?" What has happened to our humanity and compassion toward others? I don't think our country is being made great again. I'm afraid our greatness is behind us. Maureen Burke, Milwaukee Once upon a time Republicans were right. Republican President Abraham Lincoln abolished slavery in the United States and put his party on the right side of history. But being right no longer means being correct. Republicans are currently working to destroy progressive ideas such as equal rights, due process, voting rights and democracy. They recently convinced working class voters that Donald Trump would work for them. Claiming to understand the plight of everyday citizens, Trump pledged to decrease grocery prices and create better paying jobs for American workers. Opinion: My dad was a beloved bartender and sheriff. He was also an alcoholic. Once in office, he began raising tariffs, firing workers, creating chaos and seeking revenge on his perceived enemies. Caring for the less fortunate, once viewed as 'Christian' behavior, is now 'Socialist.' Trump's cruelty has become Republican policy. Today Democrats firmly stand on history's correct side, but they hold a minority in all three branches of our federal government. They need our assistance to hold the president accountable. Republicans in Congress, fearing retaliation, refuse to challenge Trump's missteps. There are two ways to remedy this problem. First, demand that frightened Republicans in Congress grow a spine. Second, if we are still holding elections, vote to give Democrats a majority in Congress. Trump requires guardrails. Susan Swoboda, Whitewater Opinion: Prosecution of Judge Hannah Dugan undermines centuries of legal precedent Here are some tips to get your views shared with your friends, family, neighbors and across our state: Please include your name, street address and daytime phone. Generally, we limit letters to 200 words. Cite sources of where you found information or the article that prompted your letter. Be civil and constructive, especially when criticizing. Avoid ad hominem attacks, take issue with a position, not a person. We cannot acknowledge receipt of submissions. We don't publish poetry, anonymous or open letters. Each writer is limited to one published letter every two months. All letters are subject to editing. Write: Letters to the editor, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 330 E. Kilbourn Avenue, Suite 500, Milwaukee, WI, 53202. Fax: (414)-223-5444. E-mail: jsedit@ or submit using the form that can be found on the on the bottom of this page. This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Headlines every day on every new cruelty is heartbreaking. | Letters

'All-in': GOP lawmakers divided on US involvement as Trump pushes Iran for diplomatic end
'All-in': GOP lawmakers divided on US involvement as Trump pushes Iran for diplomatic end

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

'All-in': GOP lawmakers divided on US involvement as Trump pushes Iran for diplomatic end

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., called for the president to go "all-in" for Israel should a diplomatic end to the conflict with Iran not be met. Earlier in the day, President Donald Trump called on Iranian leaders to return to the negotiating table to strike a nuclear deal to avoid "even more brutal" attacks. Graham lauded Trump's desire to bring Iran back to the table but countered that "if Iran refuses this offer, I strongly believe it is in America's national security interest to go all-in to help Israel finish the job." "One of the benefits of this approach is that it would substantially undo the damage done to our reputation by Biden's disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan," Graham said on X. "If diplomacy fails, going all-in for Israel shows that America is back as a reliable ally and a strong force against oppression. It would strengthen our hand in all corners of the world, as well as all other conflicts we face." Fetterman Calls For Us To Supply Anything Israel Needs For Iran Attack: 'Military, Intelligence, Weaponry' Read On The Fox News App His zeal to support the Jewish State came before Fox News reported that two U.S. Navy Destroyers, the USS Sullivans and USS Arleigh Burke, were assisting Israel to shoot down incoming missile volleys from Iran. However, other pro-Israel lawmakers were not ready to see American troops deployed in the region and believed Trump would be the key to preventing any action from the U.S. Israel Launches 'Operation Rising Lion' On Iran, Targeting Nuclear Facilities, Tehran "I can't imagine a world in which that happens," Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., told Fox News Digital. "I'd be opposed to that. The president is adamantly opposed to that. I trust President Trump here to keep our troops and other personnel safe in the region." Hawley said Trump "has offered Iran an off-ramp here for a long time" through the nuclear agreement negotiation and noted the president again offered an out. Mccaul Says Israel Strikes Are 'Perfect Opportunity' For Iranians To Overthrow Islamic Regime "You know, they ought to take that off-ramp," he said. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chair Jim Risch, R-Idaho, told Fox News Digital in a statement that "no one hates to see U.S. troops put at risk more than our president." "President Trump has worked tirelessly to end wars and stop killing. And, in this case, I know he will continue to do all he can to keep U.S. troops out of harm's way as the war between Israel and Iran unfolds," he said. Israel's strike on Iran was intended to take out the country's nuclear enrichment program and carry out targeted attacks on a number of top Iranian officials. Sen. Tim Sheehy, R-Mont., said the strike was "warranted" given Iran's years of aggression against Israel, but he agreed with the president that negotiations needed to resume. "A regime that chants 'Death to America' and 'Death to Israel' can never be allowed to have a nuclear weapon," he said in a statement to Fox News Digital. "Israel has every right to defend itself, and America stands with Israel." But others, like Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., accused Trump of killing the Iran nuclear agreement and contended that the end of negotiations "accelerated Iran's development towards a bomb." Still, he hoped a deal could be made to prevent further "escalation in the region that could endanger American citizens, troops and our interests." "As we support Israel in protecting their people from Iran's response, everyone needs to be focused on de-escalation," Kelly said in a statement. Fox News Digital reached out to the White House for article source: 'All-in': GOP lawmakers divided on US involvement as Trump pushes Iran for diplomatic end

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store